I'll be doing that in my local park in front of some dog walkers and a drunk hobo when I hear that van Gaal has been told to do one.Wow, this is so cringe!
I'll be doing that in my local park in front of some dog walkers and a drunk hobo when I hear that van Gaal has been told to do one.Wow, this is so cringe!
Who's not enjoying it?In such a shit season can we just enjoy the happy moments ffs.
Your right, lets get Alan Pardew in.Who's not enjoying it?
We've suffered all season from watching games where players have been accused of being gutless, and I can guarantee there are countless posts in the numerous LVG threads that accuse him of not motivating the players. Question remains, are players likely to be motivated more by a passionate manager.
Couldn't agree more, all he does is write in his fecking notepad!And it has nothing to do with his philosophy, or anything to do with what's happening on the pitch.
His reaction - or non-reaction - to our goal. Not a glimmer of anything resembling passion - or a glimmer of anything.
So, do outward signs of passion matter?? Should I be judging him on that? Probably not, but am not impressed.
here hearfeckin hell. Have a day off.
That celebration was priceless.If Van Gaal went mental for that goal people would've mocked him for celebrating against some Danish nobodies while the tie wasn't won.
Just like Moyes was mocked for celebrating taking the lead against Fulham.
Man can't win. ("That's the problem, hurr hurr.")
The people that doubted him.I never tire of this.
Who the hell was he raising his fists too?
I can picture this being a realityI wonder what he writes after we score?
"goal - Memphis. Didn't strike it clean enough. 10 laps"
Like they had some bet going on and he won.I saw him give some body blows to Giggsy after Rushford's first goal. Looked quite excited and happy after some goals.
No one seems interested in answering your question Livvie. Seems to me the answer is 'it depends'. Klopp and Martin O'Neill seem to get ordinary players to raise their game with a very animated sideline manner (can't believe I just wrote 'sideline manner'). But for every Klopp/O'Neil there's at least 10 Tim Sherwoods!Who's not enjoying it?
We've suffered all season from watching games where players have been accused of being gutless, and I can guarantee there are countless posts in the numerous LVG threads that accuse him of not motivating the players. Question remains, are players likely to be motivated more by a passionate manager.
Yep. It's whatever the manager does when we win every match.There has to be a happy medium...
He punched Giggs on the arm yesterday, pure passion boiling over.Couldn't agree more, all he does is write in his fecking notepad!
I've added to the title to spare you some grief, Livvs.69???
OK, fair enough - I probably started the thread wrong, but forget LVG. The question stands - does a manager's attitude rub off on players? Can a passionate manager inspire players more than an impassive one.
Me too. Probably, why was Rashford not following up and Lingard still in our half. No mince pies for them.I can picture this being a reality
This. Those were scorelines we all should be expecting from Manchester United. I don't see why we should be going nuts.To be fair - my reaction to 1.1 and 2.1 was also like his - more anger than joy because we're Manchester United ffs.
Spot on.Necessary, no, but it goes some way to showing the manager wants the same things as the fans. Neither extreme of emotion (none vs overboard) looks good though in the end it really doesn't matter if the results are there.